1937-39: Forms an inseparable trio with her best friends Saul and Willy at Morrows High School. Graduates from high school in June 1939.

1939: The Soviet Union makes a pact with the Nazis. Zionism begins to lose its appeal for her.

Summer 1940: Meets first husband Dan Zissman at a Trotskyist Fourth of July Picnic. They marry on October 26.

1940-41: Judy and Dan live with his parents in Philadelphia. She has several different jobs ranging from waitress to curtain examiner.

1942-43: Gets pregnant with first daughter, Merril, who is born in December 1942. Dan is drafted.

1943- 44: A camp-following navy wife and mother, Judy moves seven times to army bases in Chicago, New York, and San Francisco, among others. Merril starts at a nursery school for very young children.

1944: Dan's Trotskyist background catches up with him and the army sends him overseas, into action.

1945: In New York city, Judy meets Johnny Michel, Bob "Doc" Lowndes and literary agent and editor Virginia Kidd, among other literary figures. Shares a railroad flat with Kidd (then
Emden) and her daughter Karen, who is the same age as Merril. Judy gets a job as a researcher/ghostwriter.

1945-46: Judy becomes involved as president of Merril's school Parent-Teacher Association. Fights for broad access to public nursery schools. Moves with Dan into an unheated apartment on 19th Street
There is increasing trouble in Judy and Dan's marriage, and they separate. Judy becomes friends with Jay Stanton and Ted Sturgeon. Judy takes Merril's name as her penname.

1945-48: Judy is in agent Scott Meredith's stable. She supports herself as a single mother by writing nineteen sports-related short stories for pulp magazines under pennames.

1946: Judy meets Frederik Pohl when he returns from overseas. He moves into her apartment.

Feb 1948: Divorce from Dan is finalized.

May 1948: Judy's first science fiction story "That Only a Mother" is published in Astounding magazine.

1948: Becomes engaged to Fred Pohl. They marry on November 25.

1949: Writes her first novel, Shadow on the Hearth.

1950: The "McCarthy Era" begins in the U.S., comprising wide-spread sensationalist investigations into suspected U.S. Communists, blacklisting and political persecution. Judy's first novel
Shadow On the Hearth is published, so is her first anthology Shot in the
Dark. Her second daughter, Ann, is born in September and she writes her second novel,
Mars Child (later Outpost Mars) with Cyril Kornbluth.

1951-52: Her novel, Gunner Cade (with C.M. Kornbluth, as "Cyril Judd") is serialized in Astounding, and then published by Simon and Schuster. She separates from Fred Pohl.

1953: Judy lives with Walter Miller for six months. Divorce from Fred Pohl is finalized.

1954: The Communist Party in the U.S. is virtually outlawed. Motorola TV Playhouse produces a television dramatization of Shadow on the Hearth under the title "Atomic Attack."

1956: The first SF: The Year's Greatest anthology is published.

1956-60: Organizes the first Milford Science Fiction Writers' Convention, with Damon Knight and James
Blish. Continues to act as director and board member until 1960.

1960: Pyramid, New York, publishes her short story collection entitled Out of
Bounds. Marries merchant mariner and union organizer Dan Sugrue on September 24.

1963: Pyramid publishes her novel The Tomorrow People. Separates from Dan
Sugrue, but divorce is never finalized.

1965: U.S. bombs North Vietnam.

1965-69: Book review editor for Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine.

1967: Moves to England for one year. Edits the anthology England Swings
SF.

1968: Total number of U.S. troops in Vietnam reaches 550,000. Judith attends the Chicago Democratic Convention with her daughter Ann, where Vietnam War opponent Eugene McCarthy campaigns for the Democratic presidential nomination, but loses the race to Hubert Humphrey.

August 1968-69: Judy emigrates, with daughter Ann, to Canada to become a Resource Person in Writing and Publishing for Rochdale College, Toronto's
"free university."

1969: Doubleday, New York, publishes her short story collection Daughters of
Earth. Judy helps organize the Committee to Aid Refugees from Militarism
(CARM).

1970: Donates her collection of science fiction literature to the Toronto Public Library System, to found the Spaced Out Library.

1971: Lecturer for science fiction course at University of Toronto. Organizes major international science fiction convention, Secondary Universe
(Secon IV) in Toronto.

1971-83: Writes 25.5 hours of documentaries for CBC Radio Ideas, Kaleidoscope, and Radio International

1972: Spends several months in Japan. A collection of her essays on SF is published in Japanese.

1985: Organizes the Hydra Club North for Canadian science fiction writers. Edits
Tesseracts, the first-ever anthology of contemporary Canadian science fiction and fantasy. Runs "Out of This World" reading series at the International Authors Festival, Harbourfront
Centre, Toronto.

1986: McClelland & Stewart in Toronto, republishes a collection of her short stories under the title Daughters of Earth and Other Stories.

"Judith Merrill was not only a vital member of the literary
community, but a vital person, in the largest sense of that word. She
lived her times and places thoroughly, and enriched us all."--Margaret Atwood, author of The Handmaidís Tale and Blind
Assassin

"I loved Judy....I didn't care a fig about her taste, but I loved
her effect. She was an extraordinary catalyst, a perfect editor."--Michael Moorcock, author of Gloriana and Mother
London

"Merril's science fiction purposely eschewed the...escape for
which science fiction is so notorious. Rather, here were a progression of
sentences as clean and balanced as sentences could be and they were
wielded together into deeply wise stories."--Samuel Delany, author of Empire Star, Triton, and Babel-17

"The strongest woman in a genre for the most part created by timid
and weak men."--J.G. Ballard, author of Crash and Empire of the Sun

"Without Judith Merril, neither science fiction nor Canadian
science fiction nor Canadian literature nor the world at large would exist
in their present form. Better to Have Loved is essential reading
for anyone who's interested in How Science Fiction Got This Way."--Spider Robinson, author of The Free Lunch.